Reprinted from:
Atkinscenter.com
From: Atkins Health and Medical Information Services | Contact: Richard Rothstein WWR Public Relations |
and Best-Selling Author, Dies at 72
NEW YORK, NY—April 17, 2003—Dr. Robert C. Atkins, one of the pioneers of complementary medicine in the United States and one of the most famous, successful and enduring nutrition experts of the last 40 years, died on April 17, 2003 in New York City at the age of 72.
Dr. Atkins was the founder of The Atkins Center for Complementary Medicine
and Atkins Nutritionals, Inc. He also authored more than a dozen health and
nutrition books, including Dr. Atkins’ New Diet Revolution, one of the
50 best-selling books of all time, and Atkins for Life. Released earlier
this year, Atkins for Life quickly joined Dr. Atkins’ New Diet
Revolution on The New York Times bestseller list. The cause of death
was related to head trauma from an accident that occurred while Dr. Atkins was
on his way to work.
The serious snowstorm that hit New York City the day before the incident, along
with unseasonably cold temperatures, left streets and sidewalks slippery. As was
his daily habit, Dr. Atkins walked from his home to his office, a distance of
about one mile. At approximately 7:30 a.m. on Tuesday, April 8, 2003, he fell
and hit his head, suffering severe head trauma. Keith Berkowitz, M.D., a
colleague at The Atkins Center for Complementary Medicine, was arriving at work
at the same time, and was able to rush Dr. Atkins to the hospital within
minutes. The doctors at the hospital emergency room determined that Dr. Atkins
had suffered a subdural hematoma and that surgery was required to remove the
blood clot from his brain. He survived for several days but eventually succumbed
to complications.
Changing the way America eats
Named one of People magazine’s 25
“Most Intriguing People” at the end of the 20th Century and one of Time
magazine’s “People Who Mattered” at the end of last year, Dr. Atkins was a
cardiologist with a pioneering perspective on nutrition and health. His
controlled carbohydrate approach to weight management and the treatment and
prevention of disease successfully challenged conventional medical and
nutritional science. In recent years, many influential researchers, physicians
and Washington, D.C., policy makers began to embrace the principles upon which
the Atkins protocols are based as they saw the United States moving ever deeper
into the worst epidemics of obesity and diabetes the world has ever seen,
suggesting that conventional medicine’s low-fat approach to the American diet
may be ineffective.
In the past two years, a new body of research conducted at such prestigious
institutions as Duke University, the University of Cincinnati, the University of
Connecticut, the University of Washington, the Veterans Administration Hospital
of Philadelphia and Long Island Jewish Medical Center as well as at several
other institutions under the sponsorship of the National Institutes of Health,
has started to offer independent scientific support for Dr. Atkins’ own 40
years of clinical experience. The Atkins Nutritional ApproachTM
is today becoming one of the mainstream tools used by physicians around the
nation to control obesity, diabetes, heart disease and other medical conditions.
Born and raised in Ohio, Dr. Atkins majored in pre-med at the University of
Michigan and then received his medical degree from Cornell University Medical
School in 1955. After a residency in cardiology, he moved to New York City where
he later founded The Atkins Center for Complementary Medicine, one of the
largest facilities of its kind in the world.
Along with a full patient schedule, Dr. Atkins championed the natural healing
arts as a rational and effective alternative to pharmaceutical drugs and surgery
for many debilitating illnesses. He helped to bring national attention and
credibility to complementary medicine as a serious and effective medical
approach. Dr. Atkins was also a prolific writer and sought-after speaker.
In an interview
with Biography magazine, Dr. Atkins recalled how in 1963, he had his
picture taken for an I.D. card—and was shocked by the results. He had gained
about 30 pounds during medical school. After several unsuccessful attempts at
losing weight he decided to try a controlled carbohydrate diet, which he had
read about in the Journal of the American Medical Association. From his
own success, Dr. Atkins began to formalize his nutritional approach.
After a decade of treating patients utilizing the Atkins Nutritional ApproachTM,
he wrote the first of 13 books, including Dr. Atkins’ Diet Revolution
(1972), Dr. Atkins’ New Diet Revolution (1992), an updated 2002 edition
of Dr. Atkins’ New Diet Revolution and Atkins for Life (2003),
which fully describes the Atkins Nutritional ApproachTM.
Dr. Atkins’ New Diet Revolution has been among the top 10 books on The
New York Times bestseller list for almost six years, selling in excess of 14
million copies worldwide. It is also now one of the top 50 best-selling books of
all time. Atkins for Life has been No. 1 on The New York Times
bestseller list every week since its January 2003 release.
Dr. Atkins had been supervising a team of people working on multiple writing
projects, including a major work addressing the benefit of the Atkins
Nutritional ApproachTM to help stem the epidemic of
diabetes. Convinced that obesity and diabetes are twin epidemics, Dr. Atkins had
intended to dedicate a great deal of his time over the next few years to
challenging the conventional wisdom on diabetes prevention and care, much as he
had done with obesity.
In addition to his bestsellers, other books include: Dr. Atkins’ New
Carbohydrate Gram Counter (revised 2002), Dr. Atkins’ Age-Defying Diet
Revolution (2001), Dr. Atkins’ Vita-Nutrient Solution: Nature’s
Answer to Drugs (1998), Dr. Atkins’ Quick and Easy New Diet Cookbook
(1997—coauthored by his wife, Veronica), Dr. Atkins’ Health Revolution
(1988), Dr. Atkins’ Nutrition Breakthrough (1981), Dr. Atkins’
Super Energy Cookbook (1978), Dr. Atkins’ Super Energy Diet (1975)
and Dr. Atkins’ Diet Cookbook (revised 1994). Dr. Atkins’ books have
been translated into more than 20 languages.
As a leader in both natural medicine and nutritional pharmacology, Dr. Atkins
built an international reputation. He was the recipient of the World
Organization of Alternative Medicine’s Recognition of Achievement Award and
was the National Health Federation’s Man of the Year. Dr. Atkins was also the
cofounder and past president of the Foundation for the Advancement of Innovative
Medicine. He also hosted “Your Health Choices,” a nationally syndicated
radio show, and was the author of the national monthly newsletter, “Dr.
Atkins’ Health Revelations.”
In 1989, Dr. Atkins founded Atkins Complementary Formulations (changed to Atkins
Nutritionals, Inc. in 1998) with two key goals in mind: 1) to provide low
carbohydrate foods and dietary supplements to a growing population of Atkins
followers and 2) to generate funds to invest in controlled carbohydrate
nutritional science.
Three years ago, Dr. Atkins assembled a team of people, including doctors, Ph.D.
food scientists and nutritionists, and business professionals to drive Atkins
Nutritionals forward. Today, Atkins Nutritionals is a fast-growing multimillion
dollar enterprise, providing a broad range of convenience foods, supplements,
baked goods, snacks and condiments designed to serve the millions of Americans
who have adopted the controlled carbohydrate lifestyle.
Dr. Atkins and Veronica Atkins established The Dr. Robert C. Atkins Foundation
in 1999, thus far endowing it with $3 million in grants. Under the terms of Dr.
Atkins’ will, a substantial percentage of his bequest goes to the Foundation.
The Foundation is dedicated to providing funding for research and education on
the role of controlled carbohydrate nutritional protocols in treating and
preventing a wide range of diseases and medical conditions. Unrestricted
research grants have already been awarded to a number of institutions, including
Duke University, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Ball State University and
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
“Dr. Atkins had been quietly investing millions of his own dollars in the
Foundation to fund significant ongoing scientific research,” explains Paul
Wolff, chairman/chief executive officer of Atkins Nutritionals, Inc. “Dr.
Atkins had come to realize that his theories and years of clinical experience
had generated a new level of scientific awareness that would become his legacy.
He wanted to ensure that the nutrition revolution that he had begun in 1972
would continue. The Foundation ensures that his legacy of hope and health will
endure as a result of his personal financial commitment.
“As a result of his lifelong commitment to good health, controlled
carbohydrate nutrition is now a force in this country. His legacy will be the
millions of people following the Atkins Nutritional ApproachTM
as a healthy lifestyle and the growing number of doctors and other health care
practitioners who recommend the approach to their patients,” says Wolff.
In addition to his wife, Veronica, Dr. Atkins is survived by his mother, Norma
Atkins.
Reprinted from:
Atkinscenter.com